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Marian Wright Edelman

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Holding on at the 'Center of Hope'

Posted: 09/07/2012 8:33 pm

Every 29 seconds, a child is born into poverty in America. Every 29 seconds. One hundred and twenty-four children every hour. Children like 10-year-old Tyler, five-year-old Keiris, and four-year-old Jerimiah, who live with their mother, Christina Wyatt, 24, in Middletown, Ohio. In the summer of 2011 the family moved into the Center of Hope for Women and Children, a homeless shelter, after their apartment was robbed and they were evicted. Their only income at that point was a Social Security disability check for Tyler, who has Down syndrome. “I had to, really,” Christina said about moving into the shelter. “We didn’t have anywhere to go.”

When Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Julia Cass met the family there while on assignment for the Children’s Defense Fund, Christina’s voice broke as she described her determination to “get it back together” and build a life for her children different from her own: “I don’t want them to experience even a little bit of what I did. I want to give them the childhood I never had.”

Christina’s own childhood in the Cincinnati area included a mother who didn’t seem to want her, a father who didn’t take good care of her, and occasional stays in foster homes. “I sort of took care of myself from about 12,” Christina said. She went to school and made money babysitting. But when she was 14 the father of two girls she babysat for raped her. “I was really scared,” she said. “I didn’t tell anyone. Then I got sick and found out I was pregnant.”

She continued to go to school for a while but quit because she was “harassed by other kids at the school who really didn’t understand my situation.” When she found out the baby had Down syndrome she considered giving him up for adoption but “something told me to keep him. He was a gift from God.” As she spoke, Tyler bounded into the family’s spartan room at the shelter, smiled broadly and clowned around, demonstrating his ability to do the Michael Jackson moonwalk. He goes to a regular school but is taken out for speech and physical therapy. “Tyler is actually a very intelligent young man,” Christina said. “He has trouble speaking clearly but he gets his point across.” She said that his teachers and “everybody he meets” love him. “He’s got that joy,” she said. “He’s very special.”

She had to fight to keep him. After he was born, they both lived in a special foster home for teenage mothers and their babies, where Christina noticed a pattern: “After a couple months, the girls lost custody of their children.” Out of fear of losing Tyler to strangers, she asked her mother to take temporary custody of him. At 17, the foster care system set Christina up in an apartment, paid her expenses, and gave her allowance, but at 18 she was “emancipated” from foster care and on her own. She got custody of Tyler back. Soon after, she moved in with the man who is Keiris and Jerimiah’s father, but “he wasn’t a good person.” Christina paused and declared in a strong voice, “Everything I’ve been through I learned from. I would never put up with anything like that again. I know I’m more than somebody’s punching bag.”

For most of her children’s lives Christina has supported the family with food stamps and minimum wage jobs -- McDonald’s, Subway, a factory that produced products for Procter and Gamble, waitressing at the country club -- and with cash assistance (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families) between jobs. Christina moved to Middletown, where her mother lives, two years ago. She got an apartment and a job at a gas station and made a deal with her former stepfather, a recovering alcoholic: he could live in the apartment in exchange for helping out a little bit financially and babysitting the children while she worked. But that ended when he moved to Florida. Then Christina got sick, lost her job, and fell behind in the rent. During the same tough times the apartment was robbed.

Christina also lost the Medicaid and food stamps she and the children had been receiving. The system in Middletown now involves a telephone interview rather than a personal one, but Christina said she didn’t get the notice about the phone appointment, and in any case, she had no phone. Finally, they got evicted. That’s when she asked her mother to drive her and the children to the Center of Hope with a backpack of their clothes and a book bag filled with a few toys.

Christina also brought along some hopes of her own: She deeply wants to get her GED and then go to college -- not a vocational/technical school or online school but a real college. She can’t explain why, but she wants to be a lawyer. She also has a passion for writing: “I feel like I can do better than a minimum wage job. I’d be a lot happier if I were in school and moving forward to something better. That is the only answer, in my eyes, for us to have any kind of life.” Christina is still determined to give her children a better childhood than she had, and though her own childhood gave her few road maps, she wants to find a way to keep moving forward. I truly hope she succeeds.

 

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Every 29 seconds, a child is born into poverty in America. Every 29 seconds. One hundred and twenty-four children every hour. Children like 10-year-old Tyler, five-year-old Keiris, and four-year-old J...
Every 29 seconds, a child is born into poverty in America. Every 29 seconds. One hundred and twenty-four children every hour. Children like 10-year-old Tyler, five-year-old Keiris, and four-year-old J...
 
 
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09:03 PM on 09/09/2012
Every person who applies for welfare, rent help, or food stamps and is between 18 and 50 should be required to work, or at least look for work, regardless of whether they have children or not. I would only except those who are sick, disabled, more than 6 months pregnant or have recently given birth. Why in the world should young women be paid to stay home and raise their children? If a woman does not want to work for a living she should get married and get someone to support her. (And the same for a man!)

Just because you chose to get pregnant it does NOT mean that the world owes you a living. If you cannot afford to raise a child either choose NOT to have a child, or give your child up for adoption.

We need a constitutional amendment which absolutely prohibits the biological relatives of a child who has been legally adopted from trying to take the child away from his/her parents. There have been too many cases where deadbeat dads have come back and tried to take away children, or mothers who changed their minds, or even Native Americans who decided that Whites should not be allowed to adopt part NA children, being allowed to disrupt families and steal children from their parents.
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09:02 PM on 09/09/2012
I feel sorry for this young mother, for her horrific childhood, and the terrible crime that left her pregnant with her unfortunate son. But I cannot understand why she would chose to go out and find an abusive male to get her pregnant two more times when she was obviously incapable of taking care of herself and her first child.

The main cause of childhood poverty is CHILDREN. Children are born naked and screaming. They demand food, love, and shelter from the moment they are born. The love is free, everything else costs money. We need to make birth control options available to every woman under 50 all the time, whether the men who want to OWN them agree or not. We need to make low-cost legal abortions available to every woman who wants one.

We should also STOP paying young girls to have babies. That is what we are doing, whether we admit it or not. If having babies will get a young girl a place of her own, free rent money, free food, free health care, and everything else she thinks she needs, then young girls will keep having babies they cannot afford to raise.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jerry Bourbon
05:51 PM on 09/09/2012
And if black girls would stop giving birth to out of wedlock babies in their teens, these poverty numbers would go down.

Simple, really...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nypapajoe
04:55 PM on 09/09/2012
Clinton sealed the deal! He broke it down to the idiot level! Can't argue with the Facts which is an alien concept with the irrational Baggers, who are satisfied with being ripped off by the wealthy lite and their corporations that pay no Taxes and receive Billions in corporate welfare! Google it! They demonize the democrates to no avail which is rather asinine because they are not the "Enemy"! They are not the ones enriching themselves at the expense of others, they don't have foreign bank accounts nor foreign investments, they don't create wars nor sit back allowing families to go homeless or hungry! All they want is a congress to do something, anything for the common people!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cjaco
02:55 PM on 09/09/2012
While Jonah Edelman, the leader of the corporate astroturf group Stand for Children (and son of noted civil rights leaders Marian Wright and Peter Edelman) spends his days arguing that collective bargaining and teacher tenure are destroying schools, his mother’s grassroots organization, the Children’s Defense Fund, has been sounding the alarm about the massive increase in the criminalization of students in school — almost exclusively children in poverty or of color. Indeed, the number of police officers in schools nationwide increased 38 percent between 1997 and 2007 — right at the same time that the education “reform” movement picked up steam. What’s more, through the targeting of teachers’ unions, this movement serves to eliminate a significant site of democratic contestation from the public sphere, becoming part and parcel of the broader criminalization of dissent.
No credibility Marion. Shame on you.
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Hoodooman
Non-Aggression Principle
01:36 PM on 09/09/2012
Unfortunately, government will never rectify these issues. Fortunately however, many individuals within their own respective communities voluntarily help as much as they can; Never asking for face time.
09:13 AM on 09/09/2012
Then fine, decrease immigration by the number of illegals.
09:12 AM on 09/09/2012
Obama supports work visas. So at corporations like Microsoft (which has been having layoffs) they can import foreign workers to compete with you. So they lay off middle aged engineers and then replace them with imported engineers. Do you support this? Obama does.
09:09 AM on 09/09/2012
This is such a red herring. There is no difference in actual policy from the Democrats and the Republicans.

Go to Korea or Japan or Mexico...you can get birth control OTC without seeing a Dr. Now why in the US can't we just go to a drug store and talk to a pharmacist and get birth control? Oh, right because BOTH parties rigged the system so ONLY doctors can decide. Same goes for health insurance. Why do employers have all the power? Right, because BOTH parties created this system and support it.
09:05 AM on 09/09/2012
Well just innovate and get a PhD--that is what Obama says to do. How is that any better than Romney?
08:31 AM on 09/09/2012
It's too bad that all of these children don't have the good sense to be born to parents of wealth and influence--just like Mitt Romney.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jwl3ss
11:53 PM on 09/08/2012
Using this one person as an example, a probable selection based on the worst of the worst, is like picking out one welfare abuser and portraying that particular individual as the poster person of welfare fraud. The problem is quite a number of people need help at varying levels and there is only so much assistance available for them. That's an issue that won't be resolved in the short or long term, regardless of which party or elected official commands the reigns.
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tnkeating
Dyslexic agnostic insomniac
08:56 PM on 09/08/2012
Marian we all want our children to have a better life than we had, but life is never fair we all have to deal with the ups and downs of it. I started my first job at age eleven and have been working ever since. If you want something, you have to work for it. When I graduated college, I owed nothing, because I paid my way and worked while attending. It did take me ten years, but you can never give up no matter how much you get kicked down. My Mom and Dad taught me that and thats what Christina needs to teach her kids, faith, family, and freedom and your spirit can never be defeated.
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laymancanuck
IGNORANCE has used up its quota of TOLERANCE
08:20 PM on 09/08/2012
In a society were sex education is a battled, access to contraception is blocked and abortions are shamed, expect more children to be giving birth and descended for poverty.
08:14 PM on 09/08/2012
"Every 29 seconds, a child is born into poverty in America."

Maybe there should be more responsible parents out there that take care of themselves before they have kids.
08:30 AM on 09/09/2012
So in other words, family planning should be promoted in this country. And in dire incidents---access to legal abortions should not be hampered.

Unless of course you believe that abstinence is the only solution.